Some Superhero (project Olypian) oc stuff
(Intros to Oliver and Olivia, they're besties)

seen from United States

seen from Sweden
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Spain
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Netherlands

seen from Sweden

seen from Russia

seen from Russia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
Some Superhero (project Olypian) oc stuff
(Intros to Oliver and Olivia, they're besties)
More Royal au Olimmer ✨️🫶✨️
Oliver is @babblingbonnabel 's OC from her @sharedink aup
Summer is Mine
OLIMMER ART RAHHHHH
I love these 2 sm (click for better quality)
Ollie is @babblingbonnabel 'OC from her @sharedink au
Summer is Mine :3
1, 5, 9 & 10 are royal au
2 is me finishing a sketch by Bonnie (3 is her OG sketch)
4 is Summer talking to Abby (with Luna & Orion sitting in) (Abby, Luna & Orion would all be Ollie's sibs due to them also being Yakko kids)
6&12 are for funzies doodles, no specific au
7&8 are them meeting eachother's families
I ADDED THE FOLKLORE CARDIGAN CAUSE SHES A MILLION % FOLKLORE SWIFTIE. SHES ALSO A VERY BIG MUSICAL GIRLIE. ALSO TY @//cartoonistchick.2 ON INSTA FOR THE SONG SUGGESTION.
Ollie is @babblingbonnabel's OC FROM HER @sharedink AU! Summer is Mine :3
MORE ART OF THEM IS PROBABLY TO COME.
Frederick Marryat was born in the City of London on 10th July, in the year of the September Massacres in Paris. He died in a time of revolutions, and in the fifty-six years which lay between 1792 and 1848 the political map of the world changed more than it has ever done again, until our own time. He was a few weeks older than Shelley, and a few months older than Edward Trelawny, to whom, indeed, he was far more akin.
— Oliver Warner, Captain Marryat: A Rediscovery
Oliver Warner, British naval historian and writer: It would be possible, indeed it has been done, to compile an anthology of passages from which a student might conclude that Marryat was a minor master of English prose. But the extracts would need to have been chosen with cunning, and it would not be possible to lift any long unbroken stretches without revealing sentence after sentence which care would have transformed.
me, running this blog:
Perhaps, by this time, at least the outline of a series of portraits of Marryat will have clarified: as a boy rebellious, promising, wilful; as subordinate officer, bold to the point of recklessness; as commander, enterprising and clever; as friend and father, attractive; as husband, tried and trying—and, throughout life, energetic beyond the ordinary, gifted in diverse ways, never common-place, uncertain in temper and behaviour, and, like many other men and women, tending to overvalue the past as it receded.
— Oliver Warner, Captain Marryat: A Rediscovery
Captain Frederick Marryat (1792–1848), by E. Dixon (active c.1830–1839)
Lord Horatio Nelson to his beloved Emma Hamilton from the book “A Portrait of Lord Nelson” by Oliver Warner.